The last two years have been a vexing time to be a home buyer, and this year isn't looking much better.
At the beginning of the year, there were 25% fewer houses on the market compared with a year ago, and buyers outnumbered sellers in most of the metro.
Though buyers don't have much leverage these days, there are some cities in the metro area where they'll find lower prices and a little less competition, according to a Star Tribune analysis of real estate data for the 100-plus largest housing markets.
Using data on sale price, available listings and how much of the asking price sellers got, the Star Tribune's 2022 Buyer's Index shows the best places to shop are mostly rural communities on the far fringes of the metro and two suburbs, Burnsville and Spring Lake Park.
Tops on the index, which uses 2021 sales data from the Minneapolis Area Realtors, was River Falls, Wis., a college town on the far eastern edge of the Twin Cities metro that's become a go-to spot for first-time buyers including Jessica Lee, who had been renting a cramped apartment in northeast Minneapolis.
"I realized that for the price of my apartment, I could own my own home," said Lee, who works remotely so doesn't have to worry about a daily commute. With a budget of $325,000, her top priority was affordability and quality, so she shopped from one end of the metro to the other.
"I was looking all over the place," she said, "from Bloomington to as far north as Wyoming."
In early December, after a year of shopping and getting outbid 16 times, she looked at a three-bedroom, two-bathroom house in River Falls, about 35 miles east of Minneapolis.